You're Wrong About - Quarantine Deep Dive: Jessica Simpson’s “Open Book” (The Conclusion!)

Episode Date: June 8, 2020

“You really shouldn’t date people who go in thinking, ’This person has good bones but they’re a fixer-upper.’” This week, we complete our Jessica Simpson book club with the appearance of a... new man who triggers some old anxieties. Digressions include Dolly Parton, mom jeans and a forgotten Hollywood power couple. We talk about “Garden State” longer than we intended. Mike finally gets to tell the octopus story, which he thinks about all the time. Support us:Subscribe on PatreonDonate on PaypalBuy cute merchWhere else to find us: Sarah's other show, Why Are Dads Mike's other show, Maintenance PhaseSupport the show

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Starting point is 00:00:00 I feel like you find your calling authentically when you realize it doesn't fit the, like, grand heroic dreams you had for yourself. And I'm pretty sure that my calling is to be a clown. Sarah's turned to do a tagline. Okay. Welcome to your wrong about where sometimes one woman gets out of the basement. Oh, that's good. Is that too depressing? That's good. Because I'm thinking of Michelle Remembers and how, like, our last deep dive was this long book about this woman who, in my opinion, kind of didn't get out of the basement.
Starting point is 00:00:45 And my hope is that Jessica is going to get out of the basement, and I'm very excited for that. I'm Michael Hobbs. I'm a reporter for The Huffington Post. I'm Sarah Marshall. I'm working on a book about the Satanic Panic. And we're on Patreon and PayPal and lots of other ways for you to support us if you look in the description. And things are even weirder now than they have been in quarantine. And so, as always, don't feel obligated. And if you want to not support us and support something else, we get it. Yeah, like, maybe there are causes that seem more worthy than like two white people sitting in a closet talking about pop stars. Seems possible.
Starting point is 00:01:22 It's possible. And today, yes, we are talking about the denowment, a word which I'm pronouncing perfectly, of the Jessica Simpson story. I can't wait. Because times are so weird. I am like an emotional powder keg right now. It's very comforting to be recording a podcast with you where we just talk about trash men for like three hours. This is our happy place. And it makes me feel really good to be spending a Sunday morning doing this with you. Me too.
Starting point is 00:01:53 And listeners, maybe this is also your comfort zone, if it has been welcome. And the closet I am sitting in is very small, but in a more emotional realm, you are all here with me. And you all have large stuffed trout to be hugging as I am doing right now. So, Sarah, do you want to catch us up? Where did we leave? Jessica, where was Jessica last time we left her? I feel like we like left her in Walmart and you're like, who had Jessica last? Where's Jessica? Okay, the last time we saw Jessica, she had ended her marriage with Nick. She's independent for the first time in her life.
Starting point is 00:02:32 She got a place to live. She moved out of the gigantic newlyweds house. And we've heard that she's dating a lot because she's never also like never been single before. Yeah. And that's my image of where we have left her. Yes, and because we are going to spend a lot of this episode talking about him, I thought we would start off with John Mayer. Are you aware of this person? Oh my God.
Starting point is 00:02:58 Okay, so let me tell you about John Mayer. What's your relationship with Mr. Mayer? My relationship with John Mayer is confined to the moment in 2001 when your body as a wonderland was on the radio every five minutes. Yes, oh my God. And I will say with a feeling of regret and acceptance of my 13-year-old self that I really liked that song. I thought it was pretty good. I thought it was cool. I wanted someone to say positive things about my body. And I feel like that this is actually is getting us back to what John Mayer was in 2001 because I feel like he was like a sensitive boy.
Starting point is 00:03:39 Yeah. He was like playing an acoustic guitar in a way that wasn't synonymous with doucheiness maybe yet to the degree that it would become because of him. It was a more innocent time. Yes. We were like men with guitars are our friends in all circumstances. Anyway, yeah, I had a very positive response to him and so did America. Yeah. And I think he was also kind of crush worthy for middle school girls because he had, I mean, he was very, he had like a smooth face, you know.
Starting point is 00:04:12 He just looked, it was hard to tell what age he was. That's true. He was very old and yet he seemed like a grown-up. He did look like a kid from like a baby food commercial. Yeah. But also what was also interesting about him was that he did have this kind of music you hear at Starbucks quality, but he also did it with this kind of indie street cred. He managed to maintain that idea of like, I'm an authentic indie dude, even while selling like millions of records.
Starting point is 00:04:38 Right. The early 2000s were like a time when like, it just is impossible to overstate how big of a deal garden state was. Yeah, he took over my sophomore year of high school. That was new, you know, the idea that men could express emotions at all, I think was very exciting. Yeah. You know, we realized maybe that we had hoisted up as sterling examples of the kind of masculinity we wanted guys who like maybe had only figured out a couple of things. Yeah. I mean, I said many dumb things in the early 2000s, but I still distinctly remember referring to garden state as generation defining.
Starting point is 00:05:17 It's by far the dumbest thing I've ever said. Which it was. Like you weren't wrong. It's because that our generation had so little good stuff to define it. It's like, what did we have? We had garden state in the Iraq war. I think we should all watch garden state, especially if we used to like love it and be deeply moved by it and just like offer love to the part of ourselves that could not imagine a deeper film. I know.
Starting point is 00:05:45 But I mean, I think this is a good transition into what we're going to talk about because we're going to first meet John Mayer in 2010. And this is really the beginning of the end of like the indie boy darling, I think. So what happens in 2010 is John Mayer gives two interviews back to back, one to Rolling Stone and one to Playboy. Where he, I mean, there had been rumors that he was kind of a dickhead for a long time, like paparazzi tabloid type rumors, but they hadn't really gone mainstream. And then this is a long quote, but I'm going to read you the whole thing. This is from the Rolling Stone interview where they're asking him about sort of what it's like being famous and what it's like dating as a famous person because he's ended up in the tabloids quite a bit because he had been dating Jennifer Aniston. Oh, wow. And he says, all I want to do now is fuck the girls I've already fucked because I can't fathom explaining myself to somebody who can't believe I'd be interested in them.
Starting point is 00:06:41 And they're going, but you're John Mayer. So I'm going backwards to move forwards. I'm too freaked out to meet anybody else. What do you think? Do you think it's going to take meeting somebody who I admire more than I admire myself? But isn't it also about a beautiful vagina? Aren't we talking about a matrix of a couple of different things here? You need to have them be able to go toe to toe with you intellectually.
Starting point is 00:07:01 But don't they also have to have a vagina that you could pitch a tent on and just camp out for like a weekend? Doesn't that have to be there too? The Joshua Tree of Vaginas? That's so weird. I mean, I appreciate his desire to apparently be shrunken down and tiny and like living on someone's bikini area. But okay, my main takeaway from this is that he's doing the thing that it is always like fascinating when celebrities do, where he is treating an interview like a free association therapy session. This is where it gets so much worse. Just wait.
Starting point is 00:07:37 This is from the Playboy interview. Where he uses the N-word. So one of the things they ask him about like sort of there's these rumors that you're kind of a douchebag. Like would you consider yourself a douchebag? And so he says, I come on very strong. I'm very, I'm just very, V-E-R-Y. And if you can't handle very, then I'm a douchebag. But I think the world needs a little very.
Starting point is 00:08:01 That's why black people love me. The interviewer goes, because you're very. And John Mayer says, someone asked me the other day, what does it feel like now to have a hood pass? And by the way, it's sort of a contradiction in terms because if you really had a hood pass, you could call it a N-word pass. Why are you pulling a punch and calling it a hood pass if you really have a hood pass? So it's like, he's using the N-word in a sentence about how he can't use the N-word. Right? It's like, because if I really, like if black people really like me, I could say it.
Starting point is 00:08:34 I am fascinated by also the fact that like white people are obsessed with finding loopholes that let them use the N-word. Like I am actually convinced that this explains the bulk of Quentin Tarantino's career. You're like, no, but I'm, I have to be special in some way though, right? Like I can find a way. I also think this is like the apogee of late 2000s edgy humor. Remember when it was like, I'm different and like all sort of say racist stuff, but like I'm satirizing racism. I mean, this is when South Park was considered like the peak of social commentary. You know, it was a different time.
Starting point is 00:09:09 I've been an interviewer interviewing someone who's like pretty prominent and they say something outrageous. And like the two things as a journalist that you want to do in that situation is first of all, don't let them know how bananas the thing they just said was because then they'll stop. And secondly, get themselves to dig deeper. Yes. The interviewer immediately, I guess because it's Playboy, immediately switches and says, do black women throw themselves at you? So like, don't just get them talking about black people, get them talking about black women specifically. If I were the interviewer, I'd go, go on. But then this is really bad.
Starting point is 00:09:50 So here's the quote. I don't think I open myself to it. My dick is sort of like a white supremacist. I've got a Benetton heart and a fucking David Duke cock. Oh my God. John. I know. Wow.
Starting point is 00:10:04 I know. Okay. And also like for people who don't know, and I might not actually be 100% sure, but David Duke is like the leader of the Ku Klux Klan or something like that. Yes. Why would you ruin your penis forever? Yeah. For everyone. Right.
Starting point is 00:10:21 I mean, it's, it just doesn't seem like he's imagining repercussions for any of this. No. I don't know how he got that idea. But then again, like it's not like this tanked his career or anyone really remembers it that well. So maybe there weren't any. I mean, what's interesting is I think the discourse around all of the things that he's talking about have changed so much since then. Like even in 10 years, there's been a huge social change in the way that we talk about race publicly. And so you could say like, wow, things were so different.
Starting point is 00:10:51 Like back in 2010, people could just like say the N word and it wasn't that big of a deal. But it was actually a big deal. Like he disappeared from the face of the planet for like two years. Yeah. What happened? Like how did people like, what are the reactions to this? I mean, the reactions were really negative. Like this was a huge news story.
Starting point is 00:11:06 Like it got written up in the New York Times. It got written up everywhere. Like he apologized. He apologized on stage. He apologized in the press. And then he basically just like disappeared. He put out two albums in the following two years, but like he did no press for them. He's just like, here's an album.
Starting point is 00:11:20 He's a tank him actually. Yes. Apparently. Okay. But so we are now going to rewind to where he becomes a fixture in Jessica's life. Okay. So as you mentioned, Jessica is newly single. She has a new house.
Starting point is 00:11:36 Her career is actually going really well. Now that she got really good sales of her last album as a result of her being so famous from doing newlyweds, she's gotten more power at the record company and she started writing her own songs. Nice. She eventually puts out an album where she writes 11 of the 13 songs. She's also started her clothing line, which I feel like with celebrities, you think like whatever she licensed her name to like some sweatshirts, like not a big deal. But she's like running the company and she's day to day extremely involved.
Starting point is 00:12:08 So as she mentioned in the first chapter, this eventually becomes a billion dollar clothing company. I feel like having heard what she's gone through so far, I'm like, yeah, like Jessica Simpson having control of clothes seems like a very meaningful thing. The clothes used to be in charge of her and now the tables have turned. Oh, that's such a nice way to put it. Thank you. And so this is when she meets John Mayer in 2006. She had actually met him at various party LA things, but she was still married to Nick.
Starting point is 00:12:37 And I guess Nick just like clocked John Mayer immediately and was like, fuck that dude. Like with no information. Game, recognize game. He's like one of those people that like dogs bark at for no reason. But then once Nick is out of the picture, John apparently starts emailing her. And then they get into this longer and more intense correspondence. And apparently it gets like quite intimate, quite fast. She says, he asked why I would want to be famous as a wife.
Starting point is 00:13:08 He said I was so much more than what the world perceived me to be. So he's sort of lifting her up and like, you know, you're seen as a simplistic person, but I know you're more complicated. I know you're smarter. I know you're more interesting than this. She says in the summer of 2006, this is when she met him. I was still dating and using those relationships to figure out who I was. There were a few guys with big hearts and strong personalities and I found myself changing to suit them.
Starting point is 00:13:32 John wasn't having it. He told me he wanted to have all of me or nothing. He assured me he didn't want to make me into anybody else. So what we're seeing here is like, he's kind of negging her, right? Because he's saying like, you're so much more than this. But implicit in that is kind of like, well, the music that I've heard from you isn't really you. And like the public facing self, you're better than that, right? So he's already setting the standard for her that she hasn't reached.
Starting point is 00:13:58 And I know what the real you is. Yes. Inexplicably. So she kind of falls for this and they start dating each other totally in secret, like no paparazzi. There's like, they'll sneak him into hotel rooms and like he'll like wear a hoodie and come in the back door of a hotel. They do this whole subterfuge thing four months. Don't be very fun if you're used to your marriage being a TV show. Totally.
Starting point is 00:14:22 This is also the period. Remember a friend, Casey, who like is her moral center last episode? Yes. She quits. She stops working for Jessica because she thinks that John Mayer is bad news. She's like, I don't like this guy. He doesn't seem like he actually likes you that much. And then what becomes very clear, the pattern in her relationship with John is he's like weirdly obsessed with her.
Starting point is 00:14:47 You know, Jessica used to do those proactive commercials like on late night TV. Oh my God. Yes. I loved those proactive commercials. Yes. I remember these very well because she was like, here I am on tour and I'm like stressed and not eating the best food. And that was bad for my breakouts and proactive has been so helpful. And that was maybe like my first moment of feeling like she was a real girl.
Starting point is 00:15:08 Yes. And I really liked that she like allowed there to be pictures of her with acne on her face. Yeah. And was like, it's stressful to be a pop star actually. Yes. I love those proactive commercials. And so did John Mayer. That's sort of how he had discovered her and had gotten like weirdly obsessed with her.
Starting point is 00:15:26 Okay. So John Mayer and I were like both watching these proactive ads in our individual bedrooms at one time. That's weird. Yeah. And so he starts like advising her on which clothes to wear. He'll take her shopping and be like, you should have this outfit. No. Like this is more you than this other outfit.
Starting point is 00:15:43 I don't think that someone you're having sex with should be in charge of your outfits. Like that just seems like crossing the streams. This is what she says. The connection was so strong that he made me feel seductive. And he spoke about sex in my body in a way that made me feel powerful, at least physically. His focus on me was the opposite of my marriage. I think this is like extremely typical that after a long relationship you end up dating somebody who is the exact opposite of it and like that's what's appealing.
Starting point is 00:16:08 Yeah. And that's how you kind of triangulate what you actually want. Yeah. And so she says, I would get up to go to the bathroom and John would ask, where are you going? Well, I was married. My ex-husband couldn't be bothered to figure out what city I was in. It felt safe to be so desired.
Starting point is 00:16:21 I like that she puts this in here because it shows how much self deception she was going through at the time. And because he's so obsessed with her, she says, I knew John would never cheat on me. And that confidence was a new feeling for me. Wow. It's very typical, this idea that like this guy's really into me after like a really short period of time. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:16:42 So like he must not be capable of ever hurting me. Yes. But there isn't like the next leap of like, if he's this obsessed with me after two weeks, who else has he been obsessed with after two weeks? Like what will happen when I'm not the shiny new conquest, you know, and after he's like taken down his tent and left the campsite. And she mentions, she's later telling a therapist about this. She's like, this is the form that our love took, blah, blah, blah.
Starting point is 00:17:10 And then the therapist is like, you realize that's not love, right? That's obsession. Like loving somebody is mutual. It's not this like putting them on a pedestal and not dealing with the person that they actually are. And getting stressed when they go to the bathroom. And so she talks about how almost immediately she's just constantly falling short that like he's, he's building up this perfect version of Jessica Simpson, basically the one that
Starting point is 00:17:31 he's seen on TV, right? Where she's wearing makeup, the lighting is perfect. She's this like perfect sexual fantasy for every American male. She's irresistible. Yes. One might say. Yes. And he's comparing that to the reality of her.
Starting point is 00:17:47 This is what she says. Okay. Where I felt insecure in the beginning was that I always felt I was falling short of the potential he saw in me. I constantly worry that I wasn't smart enough for him. He was so clever and treated conversation like a friendly competition that he had to win. Okay.
Starting point is 00:18:02 Has John been reading the pickup artist at all? I know. I know. Like does he wear like an ostentatious hat at times? And she's talking about how his mouth goes as fast as his brain. He's very smart. He's very insightful. And she says, when I tried to leap in and say something to add to the dialogue he was
Starting point is 00:18:22 having with himself, he would challenge what I said, because that's how he saw the give and take of conversation. Sometimes he wouldn't let go of questioning why I thought a certain way until it had me second guessing myself. I'd get quiet, take another sip of alcohol and another and wonder why I couldn't just sit on the couch with him without getting so anxious. So this is also this thing of like conversation as like sparring. And that when somebody says something you're supposed to sort of dissect it, like at one
Starting point is 00:18:50 point she brings up Jesus and her faith and he's like, well, why do you believe in the Bible? Who wrote the Bible? Oh my God. When is it from? And it's like all those arguments have been done. Like we all know the arguments for and against like literal religious faith. Yes.
Starting point is 00:19:03 Well, it feels like this worldview where, and this reminds me of like people who love to debate. And I feel this is a very like adolescent male kind of a thing and kind of like Ben Shapiro like where you're like, I'm going to debate you and I'm going to grind down your arguments and I'm going to say as many things as possible and overwhelm you and win. And it's like, okay, you can do that. That's it's your life. But like, could conversation be more constructive if we didn't view it as a zero sum game?
Starting point is 00:19:33 Right. And also it's stressful to be in a relationship with someone who's acting like you're deciding who should be vice president. Yeah. Yeah. Exactly. The moral value of truth above the moral value of kindness and grace. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:19:48 That's you're, you're so smart. I like you. I mean, I feel strongly about this because I was one of these people for much of my life. So like this shit rubs me the wrong way because I see myself in it. Were you Jessica or were you John Mayer? I was John. I also was definitely once John Mayer. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:20:07 It was not a cool time. I actually remember I was riding a train in Spain and I heard people speak English in the sort of seat next to me. They were American. I was American. So we ended up chatting. This is like a weirdly indelible memory for me. After like an hour, one of the people was talking about like, I don't eat octopus.
Starting point is 00:20:23 It's a smart animal and they're cute. And so I don't eat octopus. And then I did my like reply guy thing of like, well, by that logic, there's other animals like pigs are also intelligent and like other animals have those features. And there was like this long pause and he goes, everybody gets to have one dumb thing. It shouldn't have been, but it was like this huge revelation to me that you can just like let people have their things and not try to take it away from people. Like who fucking cares if this guy doesn't eat octopus?
Starting point is 00:20:51 Right. Like why is life going to be better if they eat octopus? Yeah, exactly. Yeah. And also like, I think it reflects our own insecurity because if I'm going through life being like all of my opinions and beliefs are logical and they're based on a reasonable assessment of facts, it's like, okay, that's not true because I'm a human being and not a computer that plays jeopardy.
Starting point is 00:21:14 But if I want deeply to believe that about myself, then I can also try and impose that on others. Yeah. Yeah. And I also think it's really important that Jessica says he's making her anxious, which implies that it's not like, I mean, healthy debate is part of any relationship. But the fact that it's sounding to her like this is everything she says. And if you're stressed to hazard an opinion because you're going to get grilled about
Starting point is 00:21:37 it. And so you're like, I just won't talk about it because I don't have the energy for that right now. Exactly. And as if every statement you make has to be like a fucking PhD defense. Yeah. They're like, well, what evidence have you marshaled and supported that? Like sometimes you just want to say stuff.
Starting point is 00:21:50 Yes. When you're at home. Yes. Yeah. So this is their first of many breakups where after a couple of months, someone on her team leaks the relationship to the tabloids. John Mayer, like however famous he was, he wasn't as much of a like paparazzi darling. And then all of a sudden overnight, he's in the orbit of Jessica Simpson, who has these
Starting point is 00:22:13 paparazzi everywhere. And then it's like, oh, I guess John Mayer is on our radar. So they start following him to his house. He's become part of the Jessica Simpson cinematic universe. Exactly. So he has to be tracked now. And so it becomes this huge inconvenience for him. What's also really interesting is that him being linked to Jessica Simpson publicly.
Starting point is 00:22:32 Remember this is still 2006, back when there was like a big divide between pop music and like indie credibility. Oh, I remember this. This was kind of like when John Cusack and Meg Ryan were dating. It was like what? Yeah. Two people from like a joining Hollywood principalities that we think of as touching, but not intersecting. And so interesting.
Starting point is 00:22:53 I think a lot of his anger is partly because like he's now associated with this pop star who's like very uncool. Like Jessica Simpson was on a reality show, right? She's mostly known for this chicken of the sea thing. And so partly because he's irritated about the paparazzi thing, partly because he's losing his street cred. He breaks up with her in an email. Oh, shit.
Starting point is 00:23:12 John, come on. If you're going to be all obsessed with someone, at least break up to their face. But then what begins now is a pattern of him breaking up with her by email and then seeing her in the press. Oh, my God. And it's like it boosts her credibility or it like reminds him how attracted he is to her. And then he'll reach out and be like, oh, I saw you on like the Today Show yesterday.
Starting point is 00:23:38 I just want to say I've been thinking about you and like, here's a song that like reminds me of you. Oh, Jessica. Jessica. I know. I hate this. It's intense when they're on and it's intense when they're off. So when they're dating, she says he like takes photographs of her constantly.
Starting point is 00:23:55 He's like always like kind of looking at and touching her body and being like, I love your pelvis and I love your elbows and I love your wrists and like just rapsotic. I don't like this. And then when they're not together, he's like grilling her of like, well, were there men at that party that you were at and like, wasn't this a guy that you dated before? And do you know him? How do you know him? She says, when he tapped me dry, he looked at me like I was withholding something.
Starting point is 00:24:23 He would tell me that my true self was so much greater than the person I was settling on being. Like there was some great woman inside of me waiting to come out and I had to hurry up and find her because he wanted to love that woman, not me. You know, that really sucks because it's like it can feel like something positive. It can feel like someone's like, I just want you to be your best self and to grow and to not be this like phony thing that you're pretending to be. And you're like, I might be the phony thing.
Starting point is 00:24:51 Like you really shouldn't date people if you're going in and you're like, this person has good bones, but they're a fixer upper and I've got to change something. You know, I got to move this load bearing wall, but it's going to be good. And so she says because, you know, this is only her, what second, third serious relationship. And the only one that she hasn't started as a literal teenager. Exactly. And so she's not really seeing the just like wall of red flags, like the red sky above this relationship.
Starting point is 00:25:22 I don't really, I have never loved or identified with Jessica Simpson more than I do at this moment. I know. I'm just like, I'm there. I get it. I see it. I get it so hard. Sometimes you see all the red flags and you're like, oh, this is fun.
Starting point is 00:25:36 It's like a theme. And so in one of her emails to him, she says, I promise to be myself as I search to become the woman you already see. No. I don't like that. This is like if you're dating a cult leader, it's bad. So they're breaking up and getting back together. A lot of their relationship takes place.
Starting point is 00:25:59 It seems like over like long text message fights and like long email fights. That's really bad. One of the things, the patterns that emerges, and this is also, it's so petty, but it's so infuriating, is that he'll like, I guess correct her emails or tell her that she's like a bad writer or not expressing herself well, so she starts sending them to friends and family to have them fucking proofread her emails before she sends them to him because he's going to like give her shit because of like having the comma inside the quote or whatever.
Starting point is 00:26:31 That sucks. I think this is also very typical and very sad. Because she's in this relationship that is just a constant tsunami of stress and anxiety, like just being around this person, she's getting like a fight or flight response. She starts using alcohol to mask her anxiety because she's so nervous about being around him that like drinking more is the way to deal with it. And so eventually he starts giving her Xanax because he notices how much she's drinking and he's like, oh, don't worry about it.
Starting point is 00:27:02 Xanax does the same thing, but like it's easier to manage and people can't smell it on your breath. Oh my God. We're going to take a slight detour now. Are you aware of Taylor Swift? A young woman named Taylor Swift? I am aware. I am aware of Ms. Taylor Swift, yes.
Starting point is 00:27:19 Are you aware that she also dated John Mayer? Yes, I am aware that she dated John Mayer and I am aware that the stone cold buck we are never ever getting back together is specifically about. Oh, see, I only thought she wrote one song about him, Dear John, which I am now going to read to you. Okay, yeah. So here's the lyrics. Long were the nights when my days once revolved around you, counting my footsteps, praying
Starting point is 00:27:44 the floor won't fall through again. My mother accused me of losing my mind, but I swore I was fine. You paint me a blue sky and go back and turn it to rain. And I lived in your chess game, but you change the rules every day. That's great. So John Mayer, of course, is asked about Dear John. And so he says that it humiliated him and that he's really mad about it. And so this is what he says, I will say as a songwriter that I think it's kind of cheap
Starting point is 00:28:10 songwriting. Oh my God. Shut up, John Mayer. Come on. I'm going to say your feelings are hurt and move forward, John. I know she's the biggest thing in the world and I'm not trying to sink anybody's ship, but I think it's abusing your talent to rub your hands together and go, wait till he gets a load of this.
Starting point is 00:28:30 Uh-huh. I don't think she was doing that. Also, as someone who's like all of his songs are like working through his own issues with relationships to be like, you know, it's pretty rude to write songs about real people. It's like, how many of your songs are about Jennifer Aniston, though? Like, should we go through the catalog, son? I think we have this thing of wanting to rob women of their creativity by being like, well, she's just trying to get back at her acts.
Starting point is 00:28:59 Right. And it's like, so does it matter if like, you know, if that is some of the motivation potentially, like if it results in like a beautiful pop song that like millions of people can enjoy? Like, is it just that art is intent, John Mayer? I know. So back to Jessica and John. This relationship has many rock bottoms, but the bottomist is probably what is about to
Starting point is 00:29:25 happen next. So there is some sort of tribute to Dolly Parton at the Kennedy Center. You know, they do these things like Kennedy Center Honors, where they get like a bunch of artists and they all sing like a different Dolly Parton song and Dolly Parton is there and she's clapping and it's this thing like, Dolly Parton is dope, here's like a celebration of her dopeness, right? Yeah, what could go wrong in this festival of positivity? So Jessica is invited, she's supposed to sing nine to five.
Starting point is 00:29:52 Oh, that's so great. I know, like the best karaoke song. Yes. So the day of this thing, she's there, it's like 11am, there's like gown fittings and rehearsals and lighting and all this kind of stuff. She has to be there early. And so he breaks up with her by email at 11am that morning, like when she has to perform that night.
Starting point is 00:30:11 The whole day after the thing, John Mayer. And then he does the thing where he then sends her a song. So he breaks up with her and then like an hour later, he's like, I just want you to hear this. And it's a fucking Aerosmith song. It just begins the cycle where she's like obsessed, like what did I do wrong? What is the encoded message in this song? Like this is not healthy.
Starting point is 00:30:33 Yeah, but it's like she's in her own personal DaVinci code and this is the clue that has been given to her. And so she's basically a mess. She shows up at the Kennedy Center. One of the first things she sees is Shania Twain, who's like doing vocal warm-ups and stuff. And she notices that Shania Twain seems nervous, like she's got stage fright because like Dolly Parton is going to be there.
Starting point is 00:30:54 You're singing a Dolly Parton song in front of Dolly Parton. And so Jessica sees like, if Shania Twain is nervous, how big of a deal is this? And so this kind of gets into her head. And at one point her mom says, you need not to be drinking right now because she's never gone on stage drunk before. And one of the ways that she copes with all of this anxiety and emotional turmoil and professional turmoil is to drink, to steady her nerves. And so she notices that by the time it comes to the show, she's like, oh fuck, I'm kind
Starting point is 00:31:27 of drunk. And so she tells herself like, whatever, I've gone on stage with, you know, with a cold or whatever. And then the adrenaline kicks in and it's fine. So this will probably be fine. And then right before she goes on stage, John calls her and he's like, did you get my email? I just like, I just want to talk. John!
Starting point is 00:31:46 God! Like you broke up with her. Just like break up with someone and then move on or don't break up with them and then keep bothering them if you're still having a relationship. But like, those are your choices. Like you inspired a mini wave of great pop songs about breaking up with you for a reason. I mean, this is basically what she tells him. She's like, if you're going to break up with me, break up with me, but don't like break
Starting point is 00:32:13 up with me and then send a fucking song to decipher and then call me to like talk about it. You are negatively affecting Dolly Parton right now. Like, do you want that? And so in the midst of this, she goes on stage. She gets through, kind of gets through the first verse and then she just starts like stumbling over it. And in the middle of nine to five, she just stops.
Starting point is 00:32:36 Oh man. There's thousands of people there. The fucking president is there. The cameras are there. And she just stops in the middle of the song and she says, I'm sorry. It's an honor to be here, but this song is too good for me. I'm too nervous. And she just walks off the stage.
Starting point is 00:32:51 That is like the most Jessica way to break off a performance. I know. It's like the opposite of a neg. She's like suddenly complimenting Dolly Parton as she's like running away like, it's too good. Yeah. Wow. And so she goes backstage.
Starting point is 00:33:04 The producer says, this isn't live. So afterwards you can rerecord it. We'll fake it and put in inserts of the audience and like audience sounds and like no one has to know. So like this is still fixable. So as she's backstage, Dolly Parton comes down and of course Jessica is like mortified. Like I fucked up your song in front of you. You're like taking time away from this performance to come down and see me.
Starting point is 00:33:31 And so the first thing Dolly Parton says is, so I hear you're going to sing that song again. Before you do, I just want you to know that I wrote that damn song and even I don't remember the words. So she's like, it happens, you're having a bad day. I love this trend of like Jessica ending up in these horrible relationships and then like receiving these momentary like shining words of wisdom from like country legends. I know. And then she gets back on the stage.
Starting point is 00:34:01 The band is there. The audience has gone. It's just her and she still can't do it. She's too drunk. She's too emotional. She's too mixed up. She's been broken up with John Mayer too many times. And so this performance airs and they just like, she's just not on it.
Starting point is 00:34:17 So like nobody really knows about this, although it does leak to the tabloids. The footage of this incident is online because I think it like aired on Canadian TV or like it aired live on some backstage feed, something, something, I could not watch it. I got 30 seconds into it. It's really painful to watch. She's stumbling. She's got her hand over her stomach and sort of you can see her hand shaking and she's holding the mic and it just sucks.
Starting point is 00:34:43 It just sucks to watch and couldn't watch it. And then she cuts to like a couple months later and she's just back with John again. I feel like the whole like the myth of the rock bottom depends on this idea that like things get so bad. And then like I had this epiphany and I was done, but it's like she has the epiphany, but then she falls back into her old patterns, which is a very typical thing that people do. And then this is, this is just a rich text.
Starting point is 00:35:09 He went to Sony's Grammy after party together and I was so happy he posed for pictures with me because Grammy night is like the prom in our industry. He was nominated for five awards and won two. He broke up with me that night at the Four Seasons in Beverly Hills. I can't even recall why. I just remember knocking on his hotel room door and begging until he finally took me back in the middle of the night. Oh my God.
Starting point is 00:35:30 Yeah. I mean, I feel like there's, there's something that to me seems very understandable about being drawn to a relationship with someone who like intermittently accepts or rejects you, you know, because like that can be a way of proving to yourself that like you don't deserve to be fully accepted. Yeah. You aren't worthy. You aren't good enough to sing Dolly Parton's songs.
Starting point is 00:35:54 The siren song of bad relationships is really hard to not hear. Yeah. There is, I mean, there is this really addictive quality to relationships like this in ways that like I don't, I don't understand. Even as I've been in those relationships, I have been Jessica before, but I have no additional insight into the pattern that's going on. I feel like the natural conclusion to the story is just all of us standing up in like a Spartacus radio rebel moment and being like, I'm Jessica.
Starting point is 00:36:26 You know, like, I mean, she is offering herself as like, yes, I'm a pop star, but in my heart of hearts, I'm someone who's historically drawn to bad relationships and like what could make her more human. I really don't know. And so they finally, it's actually interesting, they've never done any music together. She has seen it as it's something that her and Nick did together. It was a part of their relationship. It's something that she has very complicated feelings about and she just hasn't really
Starting point is 00:36:52 suggested it because like that's just not a part of herself that she wants to share with John. And maybe it's the only part of herself that remains sovereign in this relationship. But then he starts to get jealous of that and is like, well, why did you do it with Nick and not with me? And so he suggests that they make a sort of remix like she's written this song that's on one of her albums, but he wants to like, well, let's do it again and all produce it and all sing on it.
Starting point is 00:37:16 I don't feel good about this, Mike. Oh, I know. I've got a bad feeling about this. And so they get into the studio and she's too nervous to sing in front of him. And then he of course starts kind of like yelling at her like, well, why can't you do this? Like we've been planning this. And so eventually she just like runs out and goes back to their hotel room and he comes back to their hotel room like hours later and they just never talk about it.
Starting point is 00:37:41 Wow. And do they ever try and do it again or just like move on? They just move on. I'm excited for Jessica to try dating a non-musician, I gotta say. Oh, well, here we go. This you're going to like this. So after this event, John breaks up with her again. He doesn't say it's because of the studio thing, but it's like, I mean, who knows who
Starting point is 00:37:57 cares? Like he breaks up with her again by email. So she starts dating a guy named Tony Romo who was a quarterback for the Dallas Cowboys. And so apparently he had like run into her dad at some event or something and had said like, Hey, you know, like I've always been really interested in your daughter. Like let me know if you could ever introduce us. And her dad had brought it up to her and she says she doesn't want to date people that are outside the music industry.
Starting point is 00:38:21 She says, I believed I could only date people who could relate to me because they were in the business, which I guess was my code for I like emotional torture and fixing dark people. It's like, oh, Jessica, she's definitely been to therapy at this point and like she's very insightful about these patterns. And so this is actually quite cute. She's at home. She's at her dad's place. They're watching football.
Starting point is 00:38:42 It's Sunday. And I guess it's the Cowboys playing. And after the game, you know, they're like, how'd you do in the game? Like these sort of after game sweaty interviews that they do with sports people. And so Tony Romo is being interviewed after this game. And so the interviewer asked him, who's your dream girl? And apparently he just like looks at the camera and he's just like Jessica Simpson and Jessica is like, holy shit.
Starting point is 00:39:07 And the bat signal lights up the clouds. And so, you know, they go out to dinner, whatever they start dating. He is a Christian guy. He says the Lord's Prayer before he goes to bed every night, which is like, good, she's bound to but who has like similar values to her and doesn't try to like talk her out of her religion. Yes. This is also.
Starting point is 00:39:28 We've had many surreal moments in this series, but this is by far one of the weirdest shortly after they announced that they're dating. She goes to one of his games. So she shows up in like his jersey, but it's pink. And she's like in the luxury box or whatever. And apparently he plays the worst game of his life. And then the Jumbotron cuts to her toward the end of the game. And everybody starts chanting, send Jessica home, send Jessica home.
Starting point is 00:39:57 Because they think she's a bad omen. They think she's the reason he's having such a bad game. I mean. Sports, dude. I feel like that's like the superstition that like women are bad luck on boats. I guess. Yeah. Apparently there's like a weeks long debate on like sports radio and stuff about, should
Starting point is 00:40:15 Jessica be coming to the games and how much should we blame Jessica for like ruining her boyfriend's football performance? Couldn't he just like play a bad game once in his life? No. And so she basically stops going to his games because it's so controversial. Wow. There's also something really fucking funny that John Mayer like writes a blog post defending her.
Starting point is 00:40:39 Of course he wrote a blog post. Yeah. He's like, she loves Texas. She loves football. She's not the problem. And it's like, John, shut the fuck up. Just get out of this one, John. Wow.
Starting point is 00:40:52 I think Jessica Simpson expert. I have to weigh in on this national conversation. And so other than not going to his games, it's actually like a relatively good relationship at this point. And one of the cutest details is that he is so into her music that like when she has friends over, he'll do the thing where he'll play her songs in the background and he'll be like, everybody shut up, shut up. This is the good part.
Starting point is 00:41:19 It makes everybody listen to them, which is like nice. Yes. It just makes me happy. Jessica deserves a guy who's, you know, enthusiastically supportive of her. That's a good thing. So this is also the time when she actually starts working with Dolly Parton and she puts out a country Western album. Oh, I didn't even know that.
Starting point is 00:41:38 Me neither. It was apparently number one on the country charts. Well, which makes sense because for what we've discussed, like that's what she's kind of wanted to do this entire time. I mean, this is part of like the transformation of her making music that she wants to make like her clothing company is doing well at this point. Her last album has done well. She has enough clout that she can just be like, I want to make a country album, so I'm
Starting point is 00:42:01 going to make one. And so she becomes like a modest star on the country circuit. She starts opening for rascal flats on his tour and she's like a working musician again and she loves it. That's so great. And this is by far the most outrageous detail. So at this time, she starts to get hints. You're not going to believe this, that John Mayer is hanging out with her parents.
Starting point is 00:42:28 How did her parents feel about him? Because they didn't like him when they were dating, right? So they actually really like him. They say he starts coming over because Ashley Simpson is dating Pete Wentz, who's in Fallout Boy and he's friends with John. But then he just apparently just like starts showing up. And so she talks to her parents. She's like, it's kind of weird that you're hanging out with my ex while I'm dating someone
Starting point is 00:42:54 else. And they're like, he comes over and like he sits by the sort of fire pit at night and like he plays songs for us and we all sing. It's kind of nice. Like he comes over and we get like a live John Mayer performance like two nights a week. That's so weird. It's so weird. I mean, to be fair to John Mayer that is innovative, I guess, because I have never heard of someone
Starting point is 00:43:18 trying to get back into their ex's good graces by like playing acoustic guitar for their parents every night. It's such a weird move, dude. But she also, she has a rule about this that she's completely transparent about this with Tony because she doesn't want to lie to Tony. And so he will still email her sometimes and she's like, hey, Tony, look at this weird email I just got from my ex. Like she doesn't want to create this situation where it feels to Tony like she's lying to
Starting point is 00:43:45 him. Yeah, good. But so one of the really interesting things is she's still sort of touring, but she's touring on like the country circuit. So she's a public figure at this time for like country music people. But she's, you know, she's on a reality show. She's not putting up pop albums. So for most of the country, she's kind of disappeared.
Starting point is 00:44:03 It's like, well, whatever happened to Jessica Simpson. And it's been a while since like she's done things that like the general population is really paying attention to. So she talks about, she's like touring things. And one of their shows is at a chili cookoff, like a state fair in Pembroke Pines, Florida. And so she goes to this event. She goes on stage. She has this like great performance.
Starting point is 00:44:24 The audience is loving it. And she's feeling like a bit of a comeback. Like I'm singing to crowds that really like me. I finally found a form of music and a style that suits me and where I'm really appreciated. And after this performance, let me just send you these are the headlines that show up in the press. I know. Jessica Simpson balloons and wait, that is the headline I am seeing.
Starting point is 00:44:53 It's bad. Can you read the first paragraph? Oh God. Yeah. Okay. Jessica Simpson is one star, not afraid to supersize her meals. After showing she's all women at a country music cake in Florida. The one time Britney Spears look alike stunned her male admirers as she stepped out on stage
Starting point is 00:45:15 to show she's ditched her one time 36, 24, 36 figure for a new set of curves. It's so weird. It makes it sound like she threw her body out dude. Yeah. Like a fit of condo cleaning and then bought a new one. This is also. I don't know. I hate this framing because what you're doing is you're making fun of somebody's appearance.
Starting point is 00:45:40 This is eighth grade shit, but you're making it seem like you're giving her all the agency. She has decided to be a larger person now by eating supersized McDonald's meals, obviously. So it's like you're trying to absolve yourself of moral responsibility. Also, it's like all of the language is weird in so many ways. It's like she's all woman now and it's like, what was she before also fuck this photo caption. Yeah. So the caption is they have two pictures of her side by side and there's one of her performing in Florida looking amazing, like wearing great high waisted jeans and a big leopard print
Starting point is 00:46:19 belt and a tank top and then next to it is her in a tiny pair of shorts. You know, just like this, the like real thin Jessica that we recognize from newlyweds and the caption is proud Jessica shows off her curves left in her slim heyday. Her slim heyday. Oh my God. It's like, yeah, metro.co.uk knows what her heyday was. I cannot fathom like if you have kind of pulled yourself out of this terrible, dangerous relationship with your body and imagine if you're able to cultivate a healthy relationship with yourself
Starting point is 00:47:06 and then the media weighs in. And this is, I mean, we're not like that much better now, but we were really bad then. So the New York Post gives her the nickname Jumbo Jessica and apparently fashion magazines are running spreads about how not to look like her, to not have a belt up high, to not have quote unquote mom jeans. She becomes like a fashion don't. Oh my God. And so she decides not to sort of do the apology to her about her weight or like address it.
Starting point is 00:47:37 This is what she says. I decided I wouldn't tell anyone that the jeans were a size 25 waist, which is an American four. I wouldn't go on talk shows to say I was 120 pounds when those photos were taken. Oh my God. I said I was that skinny and that I was deemed overweight still frightens me. No way was I going to go out there and turn on my sisters by saying, oh no, you're mistaken. It was the angle and the fit.
Starting point is 00:47:58 I'm actually a size four. And I like this that she says, what would that do to my young fans who may have been a size bigger or 20 sizes bigger? My publicist Lauren got so many requests for photo shoots and sit down interviews to quote, set the record straight. It seemed like negotiating with a hostage taker. If I disavowed having a regular body, nobody would get hurt, except everybody would get hurt.
Starting point is 00:48:19 We refuse the requests unwilling to play into the game of shaming women. And so by the standard of celebrities, she's actually pretty good. She's like, it's OK to be whatever size you are and I'm not going to defend myself. And she's not like, oh, it's mean to call me fat because I'm really skinny. She's like, no, don't mock people for their looks and their weight regardless of what they look like. Fuck you. Well, this is like, yeah.
Starting point is 00:48:43 I mean, just like if you if you take the bait and are like, no, no, no, don't worry. I'm not this thing that you are disproportionately afraid of as a culture than like you're only strengthening that divide ultimately. Yes. There's also a pretty cute TSA interaction where she's going through security at the airport and they sort of pull her side, you know, these random screenings. They sort of pat her down. And then the person who's doing the pattern recognizes her and is like, oh, you're just
Starting point is 00:49:08 getting some sense. She's like, yep. This TSA agent is like, you know, you're really not that big. And Jessica says instinctively, she says thanks. And then she walks away and then she's like, wait, and then she turns back around and she's like, it would be cool if I was though, just want to be clear, crystal clear, it would be fine if I was big. I love that.
Starting point is 00:49:27 But then what's really interesting about this, and I think this is like a real issue on an intellectual level. She gets that like any size is fine, however, she gets really self conscious about her body. She doesn't go on a crash diet, which she's really like proud of herself for. But she also says I added a black vest to my costume when I performed just like my days of performing at church camps as a kid when my body was continually scrutinized for the potential incitement of sin. It just makes her self conscious.
Starting point is 00:49:59 There's also this really gross thing where she doesn't lose weight, but people take photos of her paparazzi photos where she looks like she's lost weight. So all of these stories start to appear in the tabloids about how she went on a crash diet and she's lost like 10 pounds in two weeks. So her weight is like a conspiracy theory almost, it's like you just see whatever you want to see. So then there's these before and after photos of her performing in Florida and then like whatever, her getting out of a car at some fashion thing in New York and she's exactly
Starting point is 00:50:31 the same weight, but they're like, Jessica, stop eating carbs and she's at her new weight. And it's like, no, I'm not, I'm not giving into this stuff, but it looks like I am. The media is still sending exactly the same message, you've been criticized for your weight, therefore you lost weight. Wow. So in his defense, her boyfriend Tony is actually great about this. I should certainly fucking hope so. I know, like by the standards of Jessica's love life, it's like, okay, great, like somebody's
Starting point is 00:50:54 not a complete asshole. So he's like, I'm attracted to you, you're beautiful. I don't care what anybody else says. But then he also, he also gets really controlling about other things. So this relationship starts to sour when she starts to realize that like he wants her to be this housewife just like Nick did. The other Dallas Cowboys have these wives that like that's kind of their job is to like look after the house, look after their husband and like be there.
Starting point is 00:51:21 And then Jessica's running like a $200 million company. She has a pop career. She also has an acting career at this point. And he like starts to get a little annoyed that she's doing all this independent stuff. And so one of the weirdest conditions that he puts on this, he says, you know, I want you to have a movie career. I want you to keep acting, but I don't want you to do any movies where you kiss a guy. That's a line too far from me.
Starting point is 00:51:46 And so I mean, I think this is very interesting about like masculinity that it's not necessarily that he would be jealous, but it's how he would look to other dudes that like he would start getting teased by the other guys on the team that like, oh, your wife is in like this movie and she's kissing like Luke Wilson or whoever, which is just a weird, it's like a weird dynamic. Well, it's showing who's more important to him as part of his social world. And also that that is more important to him than his girlfriend's career, right? Because she mentions, okay, I'm like a 26, 27 year old, beautiful blonde actress.
Starting point is 00:52:21 No kissing. Like what movies am I going to be doing where there's no love interest? Yes. This rules out every romantic comedy. This even like action movies will have a kiss in them. What movies can I do, dude? I mean, the first thing that I thought of was like some kind of an Aaron Brockovich thing. And then I was like, even in those movies, you have to have a boyfriend or husband figure
Starting point is 00:52:42 who's like, you're helping the disenfranchised too much and there's not enough time for me. So yeah, there's no options for her. Right. So she kind of decides to break up with him, but she hasn't sort of like made it happen yet. She's just kind of like in the unhappy thinking about it sort of stage. And she also finds out that John Mayer is making a more deliberate effort to get her back.
Starting point is 00:53:08 So he's apparently this is part of his pattern. He sees there's a vanity fair story about her that has these beautiful photos from Mario Testino. So he gets obsessed with her again and starts like hanging out with her parents more and being like, can you talk to Jessica for me? Like I just want her to know that I've changed. I'm a lot more mature now. This is so weird.
Starting point is 00:53:28 It's weird, dude. He also does a thing where at her birthday party, a party at her parents' house, he does a thing where he like stands up and is like clink, clink, clink, clink, clink and gets everybody to be quiet. And he's like, I just want to say I'm here, Jessica's here, and I just want to ask Jessica, will you take me back? Don't ask women that in front of people. Don't.
Starting point is 00:53:51 I know. Like it. I know. Why? Why? It's literally hostage chicken. It's like the worst. Ah.
Starting point is 00:53:59 I do not like it. But then what is actually really cathartic is that he does this in front of all these people and I guess she's just like, I have a boyfriend, I'm living half in Dallas. Like this is wildly inappropriate that you would do this. So. No, thank you. But then what's weird, she goes back to Dallas and this is like a rich text. I'm going to ask you, do not respond to this until I'm finished.
Starting point is 00:54:23 It's two sentences. Okay. So much going on in this. Okay. Okay. Okay. On July 9th, the night before my birthday, Tony went through my phone. He saw an email from John to me, something about not being able to get a shower door
Starting point is 00:54:37 to work at my parents' house. Okay, you can respond. Okay. That's so weird. It's so weird. Why is he emailing her? What is this fixation? I know.
Starting point is 00:54:53 What Horcrux have you turned this poor woman into? And I love that he's emailing her about like the dumbest shit. Like first of all, why are you taking showers at her parents' house? And why do you think she'll know how their shower door works and why? I mean, I kind of am pleased by the sort of the lack of dignity implicit in that level of desperation. But like, I'm more annoyed still. And then we've also got the additional layer of Tony going through her phone and reading
Starting point is 00:55:21 her emails from John, which is like, don't do that. Don't do that. Don't go through someone's phone. And then he confronts her. He's like, why? Why is John Mayer showering at your parents' house? And she's like, I don't fucking know. This guy sucks.
Starting point is 00:55:35 Like I'm not inviting him to shower. Like I haven't even answered this email, but he doesn't believe her. And then she didn't tell him about John Mayer's weird clink, clink, clink thing at the birthday party because she thought it would be awkward. Like for whatever reason, she didn't tell Tony. And so he asks her, like, have you seen John Mayer this week? Yes or no? And she's like, yes, which sounds like she's lying.
Starting point is 00:56:01 And then he basically blows up at her and breaks up with her. Oh, my God. That sucks because it's like, she's being punished for John Mayer's behaviors. I know. But then also it's good because Tony kind of sucked. Right. And apparently after Tony realizes after like a week, I haven't heard through the grapevine that she's now dating John Mayer.
Starting point is 00:56:20 So like maybe she wasn't cheating on me with John Mayer. Yeah, maybe she was telling the truth about not wanting to get back together with this horrible ex she had that was horrible, this horrible man. And he then tries to get her back. And she's like, no, you checked my email on my phone and you didn't believe me. Like you weren't a good person to break up with. And that's pretty revealing of your character. Yeah.
Starting point is 00:56:44 And so I don't want to get back together with someone who like breaks up with someone in that way. Right. I mean, people do you a favor by showing you how they react to being at a little bit of hot water. And so this is like rock bottom number 12. After she sends Tony away permanently, she then drives over to John Mayer's house. And she's like, well, he's been pining to get back with me.
Starting point is 00:57:09 And I guess the universe is telling us that it's time for me to give in. I think that the universe often is telling us to do whatever weird cultural message we have absorbed into our brains, unfortunately. And that might be what the universe is. And then extremely predictably, she shows up there and she's like, OK, you know, let's give another shot. And he goes, I'm not really ready. I don't know if I want to do this.
Starting point is 00:57:35 Oh, my. John Mayer, I know I'm making the the most flamboyant Vafanculo fingers right now, just like leaving in the air. It's just like, just stop. Just it's funny because it's like, I know that people are constantly engaging in behavior where like on some level, they're like, this is a bad idea. Why am I doing this? And yet they don't stop.
Starting point is 00:58:03 Yeah. So like, it's not like it's surprising when people do that at all. But at the same time, I'm just like, John, do you see? Do you see what you're doing? Yeah. And then this is super fucked up. So he has just come up with a new album. He insists on making her listen to it. This is like this horrible pattern in her life.
Starting point is 00:58:20 Yes. They're listening to the songs. He's like, I wrote this one about you. And then she doesn't say this in the book, but I think it's Jennifer Aniston. She's like, you were also dating Jennifer Aniston at the time. How do I know this song isn't about Jennifer Aniston? He paused and told me he could never find material to write with her. So I'm material to you. Yeah. And like, fuck Jennifer Aniston.
Starting point is 00:58:47 She doesn't inspire my music. I know. It's like, it's again, just like the perfect neg, right? It's like, you make me want to write music. And it's like, that's not really a compliment. It's not. That's about you. Right. It's revealing of a worldview where your preferences are like the arbiter of quality. And so this is again, you know, you have the epiphany.
Starting point is 00:59:08 You're like, he's only doing this for material. It's absolutely disgusting. And then she stays with him for three more months. Yeah. It's like, OK, you know, she realizes what she's doing. She talks about it very insightfully in the book. Like, I knew it was dumb and bad and I did it anyway. And then what's really interesting is what actually does it, what really breaks them up and like puts a stake through the heart
Starting point is 00:59:31 of this relationship once and for all is his fucking Playboy interview. Where first of all, he says appalling stuff about black women. And he says the N word, like not a great feature of your boyfriend. And then I'm going to read you this thing of what he says about Jessica Simpson. It's bad. Oh, God. All right. Playboy says in 2006, you began dating Jessica Simpson and the paparazzi started stalking you. Certainly you knew that was going to happen.
Starting point is 00:59:58 And then Mayor says it wasn't as direct as me saying, I now make the choice to bring the paparazzi into my life. I really said, I now make the choice to sleep with Jessica Simpson. That was stronger than my desire to stay out of the paparazzi's eye. Or to like have a relationship with her, but whatever. He also says that girl is like crack cocaine to me. Sexually, it was crazy. That's all I'll say.
Starting point is 01:00:21 It was like napalm, sexual napalm. Have you ever been with a girl that made you want to quit the rest of your life? Did you ever say I want to quit my life and just fucking snort you? If you charge me $10,000 to fuck you, I would start selling all my shit just to keep fucking. And you know that he thinks that he's like saying something nice. I know. And also she's like a Christian and she's a public figure.
Starting point is 01:00:43 And what she talks about, I mean, first of all, it's just such a dehumanizing way to talk about somebody that you dated. Secondly, she knows she's a woman in public life. She is going to get asked about this for the rest of her career. And that is exactly what happens that for years after this, every time she sits down with an interviewer, they're like, what do you think about John Mayer saying you're a sexual napalm? Jessica, are you sexual napalm?
Starting point is 01:01:06 Yeah, it's like this is going to be a huge pain in the ass in my life for years. And it's going to sexualize me again when like I'm running a company. I'm in my thirties. John Mayer's metaphors about women are also very weird. Like there's the Joshua Tree, Vick China. And then the napalm thing is like, why John Mayer? Are you so interested in conceptualizing yourself as having no power in this situation?
Starting point is 01:01:36 Like, what's that about? There's also the thing I also think part of this. I have no evidence for this, but I think part of this is like somewhat performative that when men talk about women to other men, they tend to over sexualize them because they don't want to admit that like we actually like connected as people like you can't say that as a man in public life. Or maybe men don't say that as men in public life. Maybe if one brave man starts doing that, others will follow.
Starting point is 01:02:02 But it's like in his like little like marmot brain, he's just like, oh, well, like I really like fucking her. And I loved having sex with her. And it's like, John, you could say the same thing about a pumpkin. Like, what does it mean? So he writes her a letter to apologize. I wish she I wish she printed the text of it. I'm sure it's so funny, but we don't know what it says.
Starting point is 01:02:26 I bet there are grammar mistakes in it, too, which would be highly satisfying. And then she completely ghosts on him. She says, I love this line. I was done with this man in a way I never thought was possible. I was like, we are never ever getting back together. I love that John Mayer inspires this response of like, I am done. Like the dunnest blow up the building. Like, let's use some of my sexual napalm on that.
Starting point is 01:02:54 Yeah. She also says she's like so done with him. She changes her number and her email address. Well, if you're somebody like Jessica Simpson with like a million contacts, it's actually a huge hassle to do that. It's like, that's how much she wants this man out of her life. That's beautiful. And it's nice because it's like she's like, how do all these relationships that have gone wrong in various ways?
Starting point is 01:03:18 But like this one is like maybe so flamboyantly bad that it's allowing her to like be like goodbye to this whole era of my life. That's my dream. And so that is where we are going to start to wrap up the story of Jessica. OK. As you mentioned earlier, one of the things we really like about the story, as opposed to a lot of our other episodes, is like, we know that everything sort of works out for Jessica.
Starting point is 01:03:45 And so I think we should end with a couple little montages of how things ended up working out for Jessica. I love that. Let's do it. So six months after the John Mayer ghosting, she meets her current husband, Eric, who is a football player for a team. And then he retires in 2008. And there's this whole sort of complicated grid flowchart thing of like how he ends up at her house.
Starting point is 01:04:13 It's like a friend of a cousin of a friend of an employee. But anyway, she's having friends over to watch, I think, a football game or maybe a basketball game, just like having a bunch of buddies over on like an afternoon. And he shows up this hot, retired football player. And I really like this. He kind of walks in to meet the host of the party you're going to. And he walks into the kitchen and she's chatting with a friend. He says, hi, I'm Eric.
Starting point is 01:04:38 And he sees that sort of next to her in like the little kitchen island thing is a book on dream interpretation. And he also notices that it's like dog eared and there's a million Post-it notes in it. And like this thing has been like loved to death. And so I really like this about him that he completely skipped small talk, like no traffic, no weather, and just goes to like, I guess you analyze your dreams. And she says immediately, she's like, yes, I do.
Starting point is 01:05:05 Last night I dreamed that I pooped out a pig and he's like. Oh, and then they just sort of instantly click. And I guess they sit sort of like in her little kitchen nook on the steps. They just sit shoulder to shoulder and just talk for like two hours. And then as people start to trickle out of her party, he's like, well, better get going. And she's like, stay. And so he spends the night. He has to leave early the next morning to go to a Marianne
Starting point is 01:05:36 Williamson seminar, Camio. And so throughout the rest of the book, it's just the experience over and over again of dating somebody who casts her as the protagonist of these stories. So she has like a thing. She's not sure where it came from, but she has this like fixation on 11 11, like the time. Because that's when you make a wish, in my understanding, right? Yeah. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:06:00 And so he proposes to her on November 11th at 11 11 a.m. That's adorable. And he's like, you like this and I have noticed. It's just a way of being like, I'm going to make this story special for you. Yeah. Like I'm not I'm not casting this as like, I'm going to have this amazing proposal story like Jumbotron style. It's like, like I want your feeling of specialness to be central to this.
Starting point is 01:06:22 She also one of the things that she actually sort of writes around in the book. And I completely understand is her relationship with her parents. That's something that she never goes into detail. Her description of firing her father is one paragraph. She basically says that her parents get divorced in 2012. She kind of chooses her mom's side. She doesn't see her dad for a while, but he's still her business manager. And he just starts making more and more erratic decisions, apparently.
Starting point is 01:06:51 And people will say to her like, oh, yeah, I thought we had this deal. But then you pulled out at the last minute and she'll be like, what? I've never even heard of this. And eventually what she says in the book is just like, I had to go forward without him. So, you know, she thanks her dad and the acknowledgments. They're still close. I get why she didn't go into it too much. But so that's really all we get of that relationship.
Starting point is 01:07:12 She also talks about, you know, sort of running up to this intervention that her friends have in 2017, that she's drinking more. She starts to get more anxious about her body after she has two kids. She decides to get a tummy tuck. She goes into the doctor and the doctor says, I can't do this because there's too much alcohol in your liver and too many prescription drugs. It's not safe. And so I think she like just finds another doctor and gets it anyway.
Starting point is 01:07:37 Apparently, like her staff and stuff start marking the alcohol bottles in her house so they can monitor how much she's drinking. Then as we talked about in chapter one, she has this sort of breakthrough with her dad. She has a breakdown. She has an intervention. She starts seeing a therapist twice a week. She decides to stop drinking. Eric decides to stop drinking.
Starting point is 01:07:57 And there's actually some really interesting stuff about just sort of the weird life adjustment that has to happen after you quit drinking when she's built her life around alcohol in all these ways that she wasn't really aware of until it's gone. So like the first time she goes out to dinner and they don't order a bottle of wine, it's like, oh, I guess we can do that. Like that's a little test. And the first time she performs without alcohol
Starting point is 01:08:21 and the first time she goes to a friend's cocktail party without alcohol, it's just like all these little milestones of her life that have become inextricably linked with alcohol. I also feel like alcohol is like a security blanket in that way. And it's like being Dumbo and realizing that you can fly without your magic feather. Yeah. And so she starts to sort of deal with her past and explore all this stuff in therapy and come to a lot of the insights that she's had throughout the book.
Starting point is 01:08:45 And so the the scene we're going to end with, she decides to sort of like a reward for everything going really well. She tells Eric that she wants to take her and the kids to Disneyland, even though like Disney is a weird place for her, right? Because of the Mickey Mouse Club and these performances that she was doing. And it's always been a sight that she feels weird about. Oh, God, I'm actually having personal baggage with Mickey Mouse. Like, I'm stressful.
Starting point is 01:09:08 I know. And so her husband's like, are you sure? And she's like, yeah, I'm ready. Wow. There's a scene the night that they get there. They're at the pool, at their hotel, they're playing around. This woman comes up to her and says, oh, my God, it's Britney Spears. Oh, God. And Jessica Simpson is like, no, sorry.
Starting point is 01:09:32 And so this woman thinks that she is Britney Spears, but she's like being coy. You know, I like celebrities do that. Like, I'm not Will Chamberlain. Like, no, it's not me. So reminds me that Judy Greer has a book called I Believe. I don't know where you know me from. Like this is a common experience.
Starting point is 01:09:50 She and so this woman is like, oh, come on, like we know it's you. We won't tell anybody else. We promise it's fine. Please just take a picture with us. We won't bother you anymore. And so it's easier. So Jessica Simpson's like, yeah, OK. So whatever she's like, smile like they're like, thanks,
Starting point is 01:10:05 Brittany and they run away. Oh, my God. She thinks it's funny. She doesn't really think anything of it. And then the next day she's like walking around Disneyland with her kids. And this woman out of nowhere like runs up to her and is like, oh, my God, it's you. And it's the same woman from yesterday who took a selfie with her who thought that she was Britney Spears. And she's like, oh, hello again.
Starting point is 01:10:24 And this woman goes, you're Jessica Simpson. I'm so sorry. We were looking all over the park for you today so that we could apologize. We finally realized it last night. Oh, my gosh. That's so lovely. And she's like, these things happen. It's not a big deal. And this woman says, Jessica, can we take another photo with you as Jessica
Starting point is 01:10:43 Simpson? Oh, my gosh. And Jessica says, only if you smile. We're ending with an anecdote with metaphorical significance. That's beautiful. So we're leaving her at Disneyland knowing who she is, which is where I hope that we all can be as soon as possible. Yes. So yeah, what do you what do you think we're we're done?
Starting point is 01:11:07 That's the end of our Jessica journey. I love Jessica Simpson so much. Oh, my God, this has been so fun. And I have loved getting the responses from people about the series because we've gotten many responses that I've seen from people who are like, I did not think that I would become so invested in Jessica Simpson or that I would care, but I do. I know, you know, I mean, there's a lot of celebrity memoirs in the world,
Starting point is 01:11:30 right? They really run the gamut and there's the ones that you can tell were kind of written by a team and don't involve a lot of self-disclosure. I think it's very meaningful and worth remarking on when someone claims to be telling you the story of their life and actually does. Yeah. Like, I feel like I've grown from this experience. Like, I feel like I identify with Jessica in so many ways. I am a feelings addict. I am drawn to bad relationships.
Starting point is 01:11:59 I have my own substance security blankets. Like, I just feel very connected to her in a way that I truly never imagined would happen when she was being aggressively marketed to me as a tween. And I just really love that. I'm just really happy about that. Sometimes there's a person around the torso. Sometimes you can find them.

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